The 15-year-old’s body was found in the river that runs through the city, weighed down with rocks and wrapped in a blanket.

On Tuesday, Manitoba child and youth advocate Daphne Penrose released a long-awaited report into Ms Fontaine’s life and how her case had been handled by various provincial agencies.

“Throughout her life, Tina needed an array of services from child and family, education, victim support, law enforcement, health, and mental health systems,” Ms Penrose wrote in her 115-page report.

“At times, particularly in the final months of her life, some of these services were unavailable, not easily accessible, or ill-coordinated, which did not provide the supports and interventions she desperately needed.”

Ms Penrose’s report indicates that Ms Fontaine grew up in stable and loving home on the Sagkeeng First Nation, north-east of Winnipeg, from the age of five, living with her great-aunt.

But following the violent death of her father when she was 12, she began to struggle.

The report found the sadness caused by his sudden death “grew and expanded until it began to manifest in difficulty at school, experimentation with drugs and alcohol, running away, increasing violence, and being sexually exploited by adult men who preyed on her”.

But the schoolgirl was never provided with a single counselling session or cultural healing services in the wake of his death, “despite ongoing assessments and recommendations that this was a critical need in her life”.

Ms Penrose issued five recommendations to address “a number of gaps across these public systems” highlighted in her report.

In 2016, Canada launched a multi-million dollar inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls in the country. The final report from that inquiry is due later this spring.